Tredell Smith v. New Orleans City et al.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedDecember 22, 2025
Docket2:14-cv-01559
StatusUnknown

This text of Tredell Smith v. New Orleans City et al. (Tredell Smith v. New Orleans City et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tredell Smith v. New Orleans City et al., (E.D. La. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA TREDELL SMITH CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO. 14-1559

NEW ORLEANS CITY ET AL. SECTION (3)

ORDER AND REASONS

Defendants have filed a Motion for Summary Judgement.1 Plaintiff, Tredell Smith, opposes the motion.2 For the reasons below, the motion is granted. I. Background3 On the evening of July 6, 2013, Smith was socializing with family and acquaintances outside a home in New Orleans on North Roman Street, near an intersection with Columbus Street.4 New Orleans Police Department officers Shelton Abram and Joseph Hebert were proactively patrolling the neighborhood because of a recent shooting incident.5 They observed that Smith matched the description of the

1 R. Doc. 74. 2 R. Doc. 75. 3 As it must at this stage, the Court construes disputed facts in Smith’s favor. That said, Smith does not controvert most of the facts set forth in the motion for summary judgment. See Local Rule 56.2. 4 R. Doc. 75-1, ¶ 1. 5 R. Doc. 74-2, ¶ 1. 1 perpetrator.6 When Officers Abram and Joseph Hebert approached the group, Smith fled.7 While fleeing, he dropped a handgun.8 The patrol officers called for a K-9 unit and Special Weapons and Tactics

(SWAT) team to assist in the arrest of a potentially dangerous suspect.9 Officer Standeford arrived as part of the K-9 unit. Patrol officers advised him that Smith matched the description of the perpetrator in a shooting incident, was attempting to evade arrest, and had dropped a handgun.10 Smith testified that, after officers “screamed, ‘I’m about to release these dogs,’” he ran into the North Roman home.11 The SWAT team searched the North Roman Street house but did not find

Smith.12 Officer Standeford then prepared his canine, “Bo,” to conduct a search of the area.13 Officer Standeford did not know whether Smith had carried any weapons other than the dropped handgun or whether he had re-armed himself during the pursuit or in the home.14

6 R. Doc. 74-2, ¶ 3. 7 R. Doc. 75-1, ¶¶ 2–3. 8 R. Doc. 74-3, ¶ 6 (Standeford declaration). Smith pleaded guilty to possession of a firearm or weapon by a felon in connection with the charges that followed. R. Doc. 74-4 at 2. 9 R. Doc. 74-3, ¶¶ 4,7. 10 Id.¶ 6. 11 R. Doc. 75-6 at 8:17-18. 12 R. Doc. 74-3, ¶ 7. 13 Id.¶¶ 8–9. 14 Id.¶ 7. 2 Officer Standeford and Bo searched the area around the North Roman house, then moved to Columbus Street. Police gave, and Smith heard, a K-9 warning.15 Smith testified that that he heard officers “screaming they’re about to release dogs.

I’m like, oh, no, so I went under the house”16 on Columbus Street.17 Smith denies hearing any additional warning after he crawled under the house.18 Bo indicated that Smith may be under a house on Columbus Street.19 Officer Standeford knelt and attempted to see Smith, but he was unable to do so.20 Officer Standeford sent Bo to search under the house.21 Bo began to air scent, proceeded to the residence next door on Columbus Street, and immediately went underneath the

house.22 Bo apprehended Smith and bit him twice—once on the right side of the face and once on his lip—in an attempt to obtain a grip on Smith.23 Smith began yelling and, within seconds, indicated that he would come out from under the house.24 Officer

15 R. Doc. 74-3, ¶ 10. Officer Standeford reports that he gave “three loud and clear K9 warnings toward the rear yard to give Smith ample time to comply and surrender to police.” See id. 16 R. Doc. 75-6 at 9:22–25. 17 R. Doc. 75-6 at 9:22-25. The Columbus Street house abutted the property line of the North Roman house. R. Doc. 74-3, ¶ 10. 18 R. Doc. 75-6 at 23. 19 R. Doc. 74-3, ¶ 12. 20 Id. 21 R. Doc. 75-1, ¶¶ 5–6; R. Doc. 74-3, ¶ 13. 22 R. Doc. 74-3, ¶ 13. 23 R. Doc. 75-6 at 24:20–26:4. 24 R. Doc. 74-3, ¶ 13. 3 Standeford immediately commanded Bo to release him.25 Bo then retreated, and Smith was ordered to emerge.26 Smith began crawling out.27 When Smith’s body was halfway out from under the house, Bo bit him again,

this time near the left side of his jaw.28 Smith does not allege that officers instructed Bo to do so. Rather, Smith asserts, Bo decided to bite Smith as he emerged. According to Smith, officers attempted to call off and pull off Bo. Smith testified: So [Bo] waited until, like, half of my body was out and then he attacked me again. And that’s when the police was able to, like, get him off me by screaming whatever they screamed. First, they screamed in English, and then they screamed something in another language, and then he obeyed.29 *** So when he – by my jugular on my left side, they was grabbing him by his collar and with a vest, a safety vest. They was trying to get him off me like this. . . .That’s how I knew the cop was trying to stop him because he didn’t want to listen.30

Other than the implicit delay in switching from one language to another, Smith has not presented evidence of any delay by officers in calling off Bo. Officers handcuffed Smith and awaited the arrival of an ambulance.31 Bo’s bites caused Smith’s permanent disfigurement and neurological issues.32

25 Id. 26 Id. ¶ 13. 27 Id. It is unclear whether Smith heard the officers call off Bo, but it is undisputed that Bo retreated. R. Doc. 75-1, ¶ 8. 28 R. Doc. 75-6 at 25:5–277. 29 R. Doc. 75-6 at 27:6–12. 30 R. Doc 75-6 at 28:13–20. 31 Id. at 26. 32 Id. at 5, 29–32, 35–37. 4 In connection with the incident, Smith was charged with possession of a firearm by a felon, illegal carrying of a weapon while possessing narcotics, possession with intent to distribute marijuana, and flight from an officer.33 Smith pled guilty to

possession of marijuana, second offense, and possession of a firearm or weapon by a felon.34 He received a five-year sentence.35 Smith filed his lawsuit on July 6, 2014.36 In January 2016, Smith requested and the Court granted an administrative stay of the proceedings pending his release from incarceration so that he could “more fully participate in the preparation of his case.”37 Smith was apparently released from custody in 2018.38 He did not move to

reopen the matter, however, until September 2023.39 The parties consented to proceed before the U.S. Magistrate Judge, and a bench trial was set for October 2024.40 After the matter was re-allotted to the undersigned, the parties jointly requested a continuance, including because of the need for further discovery and because Smith was again incarcerated.41 To accommodate the need for discovery and

33 R. Doc. 74-3, ¶ 14. 34 R. Doc. 74-4. 35 R. Doc. 1, ¶ 15. 36 R. Doc. 1. 37 R. Doc. 38 at 1. 38 This date is recited by Defendants and not contested by Smith, and it is also consistent with the imposition of a five-year sentence in November 2013, which the record confirms. R. Doc. 74-4 at 2. 39 R. Doc. 43. 40 R. Doc. 53. 41 R. Doc. 56. 5 Smith’s incarceration, the Court issued a new Scheduling Order, setting a discovery deadline of November 13, 2025, and a bench trial date of January 12, 2025.42 II. Standard of Law

Summary judgment is appropriate if a movant shows “that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). “A genuine dispute of material fact exists ‘if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.’” S. Ins. Co. v. Affiliated FM Ins. Co., 830 F.3d 337, 343 (5th Cir. 2016) (quoting Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986)). “[T]he plain language of Rule 56(c)

mandates the entry of summary judgment . . .

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Tredell Smith v. New Orleans City et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tredell-smith-v-new-orleans-city-et-al-laed-2025.